Sunday, April 28, 2024

How does a tornado cause widespread fires that devastate mainly exclusive, high-rent districts? Asking for a friend

On the streets in West Virginia . . .

Saturday, April 27, 2024

ROBERT BARNES: "There is no Constitutional integrity without election integrity, and that is why election integrity must be a civil right"

"Election Integrity, the Civil Rights Issue of Our Time," Robert Barnes


One citizen, one vote. 

An honest vote honestly counted. 

OWEN BENJAMIN: so adversity is something really good. Someone like me matured a lot faster and I've innovated a lot more, and my life is a lot richer BECAUSE of the oppositions I've had

I can tell the despair meter and the psy-op meter is getting cranked up right now, and I genuinely do have a lot of compassion for the youth and I think my stories and my perspective may help you out a little.  

00:25. Okay so I've been posting a lot about the Baby Boomers. The Boomers!!  And people are like, "How dare you, big bear! Don't you know Tim Dylan already does all this?  He's one of the biggest comedians on Patreon.  Don't you know you're just cleaning up old Tim Dillon scraps?"  Let me tell you a story.  I was doing baby boomer jokes in 2016, 17, or 18.  I was doing the whole "Oh, we went to the moon!"  The "Duck, baby boomer!"  

The Connect with Johnny Mitchell.  I'm actually very mass demographic as the kids would say.  

Can't rent out a house on AirBnB.

It's one thing to talk trash; it's another to not let me compete.  But don't pretend that I can't compete with them.  I'm not even allowed on the platforms.  I'm not even allowed on YouTube.  And to have people say, "Oh, you're just taking Dave Chappelle's joke."  No, bitch, I did that joke 6 years ago, before Chappelle.  And being ahead of the curve with no criminal record, I'm a family man, I'm happy, I play music.  It's just not real competition.  One of the reasons I think that Timmy Dillon is allowed on, who's very funny by the way, I think he's more free than most.  He's more unique than most, is because he's fat and gay, and that plays into the depopulation agenda.  But here's my point: I'm basically a basketball player who got kicked out of the league for dunking, and now everyone dunks and they still pretend I'm crazy.  That could easily make someone bitter.  Like, imagine if you were trying to play basketball and you were not allowed to wear shoes, and your basketball was just a giant boulder.  And here's the irony.  I'm still competing.  My last special was great, and the beauty of this, and this is the advice I'm giving the youth, cream rises to the top.  

06:25  And so adversity is something really good.  Someone like me matured a lot faster and I've innovated a lot more, and my life is a lot richer BECAUSE of the oppositions I've had.  I got into farming, and I got into de-centralized comedy.  I developed a relationship with my listeners.  I tape specials in tents and it's beautiful.  And so when you're given opposition, in the comedy world, my story is crazy.  When literal criminals, murderers, drug traffickers, like disgusting people pushing gambling and sodomy and alcoholism on the youth, yet I'm not allowed on the very platforms that they are, to this day, 

God is above these wicked people. 

17:00  It's not fair that I'm not allowed to compete with these people that I was years ahead of.  But it is in the big picture.  And I've gotten better for it, I've gotten healthier for it.  If I was on the road all the time, I wouldn't have had 4 kids.  I wouldn't have been able to crush that ovulation cycle like I did, you know.  I kept my wife pregnant for 7 straight years.  You can't do that if you're on the road.  "Oh, I'm going to miss ovulation.  I'm in Cincinnati."  I wouldn't trade anything for my family.  I could sell out Madison Square Garden every day for 20 years, and I wouldn't trade that for 1 giggle with my son, for 1 day playing catch with him.  I reek of authenticity.  So keep crushing.  You're doing great kid.   

 

Introducing, or should I say reintroducing, Sabrina Wallace

Our eyeballs only view .0035% of the electromagnetic spectrum we live in.  Rosie Alderson explains that,
But, as I often point out when I’m teaching this topic, the human eye can only detect 0.0035% of the electromagnetic spectrum. We term the tiny fraction that humans can see as ‘visible light’ and carry on with our lives, largely oblivious to the huge spectrum of electromagnetic waves present all around us. 
What is the electromagnetic spectrum?
Can you see the wireless waves coming from your phone?  No. 

Can you see the wireless waves from your microwave?  No. 

Can you see the wireless waves with your AM/FM radio?  No. 

Can you see the wireless waves when you get an X-ray at the dentist's office?  No. 

Okay.  These people that run electromagnetic warfare for 60 years on paper with jobs, they see it all.  

How much do you see?  .0035%.

How many of you were taught about that biofield? How many of you were taught how to use it?  How many of you even know it's there for real?  And when you do start talking about it, how do people around you behave?  They start acting weird, they make fun of you, they tell you it's not real, blah, blah, blah. 

Simultaneously, do you have a FitBit?  Do you have a health app on your phone?  Do you have an aura ring?  Do you have other sensate wearables, the different health apps that make your nervous system calm down automatically?  This is called the Internet of Medical Things.  It's brand new.  The Internet of Medical Things is the same system that we have been using for 60 years with the same ability to electromagnetically manipulate your body from the inside out, and from the outside in.  

Can you see your own aura?  Probably not.  When you go out among people, do you see their bio-field, formerly known as the aura?  Probably not, but these people do.  

So for the normies, the question is always the same, "What do we do?  What do we do?"

Where's your bio-field?  And when I do that, what usually ends up happening is that this is your body, it's your anatomy.  That's step one.  You have to be able to feel it, and if you can't, that's because it's a body part.  It's not 
When you can't feel it, who's in control of it? 

Yes, when you can't feel it, who's in control of it?  It's your body part.  So what I do is something called bio-field practice.  Anybody